IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO GET AN ACCOUNT, please write an
email to Administrator. User accounts are meant only to access repo
and report issues and/or generate pull requests.
This is a purpose-specific Git hosting for
BaseALT
projects. Thank you for your understanding!
Только зарегистрированные пользователи имеют доступ к сервису!
Для получения аккаунта, обратитесь к администратору.
The setting is completely meaningless, as WithoutRA= and UseDelegatedPrefix=
in [DHCPv6] section, and DHCPv6Client= in [IPv6AcceptRA] section control
the behavior.
Previously, the prefix delegation is enabled when at least one
downstream interfaces request it. But, when the DHCPv6 client on the
upstream interface is configured, some downstream interfaces may not
exist yet, nor have .network file assigned.
Also, if a system has thousands of interfaces, then the previous logic
introduce O(n^2) search.
This makes the prefix delegation is always enabled, except when it is
explicitly disabled. Hopefully, that should not break anything, as the
DHCPv6 server should ignore the prefix delegation request if the server
do not have any prefix to delegate.
This is useful if the auto-firmware setting has been disabled. The
keys used here are based on what the majority of firmware employ in
the wild.
This also ensures there's a chance for the user to discover this in
case they were too slow during POST or simply used the wrong ones.
This is supposed to be used by package/image builders such as mkosi to
speed up building, since it allows us to suppress sync() inside a
container.
This does what Debian's eatmydata tool does, but for a container, and
via seccomp (instead of LD_PRELOAD).
When Assign= in [DHCPv6PrefixDelegation] is enabled, then the kernel
will create the prefix route for the assigned address with metric 256.
When Assign= is disabled, then the kernel will create the route with
metric 1024.
For the default value, we should choose a smaller value (higher priority)
than 1024, as the unreachable routes for delegated prefix will be
configured with 1024.
This adds support for dm integrity targets and an associated
/etc/integritytab file which is required as the dm integrity device
super block doesn't include all of the required metadata to bring up
the device correctly. See integritytab man page for details.
This option has coredumpctl look at all journals instead of only the
local ones. This allows coredumpctl to show information about remote
coredumps if the coredumps are made available in /var/lib/systemd/coredump
and the corresponding journals are made available in /var/log/journal.
This is already possible using the --directory option but --all makes it
more user friendly since users don't have to enter the journal directory
anymore as long as it's available under /var/log/journal.
Let's make our service managers slightly less likely to be killed by the
OOM killer by adjusting our services' OOM score adjustment to 100 above
ours. Do this conservatively, i.e. only for regular user sessions.